Finally I find someone I can speak my mind to around here that won't be offended. Those Chihuahuas are vicious I'd watch out for their sharp teeth. Although I think a cat would be a more apropos for this situation
. I hate separating conversations in quotes I hope you don't mind.
So we agree that science is limited yes? In the same way that science is limited in telling us about our dreams, it is also limited in explaining spirits and the occult. That's the point I'm trying to make. So we will never be able to "measure" a ghost. After my mother passed away from a terrible death my house was alive. I would have never told you ghosts were real. Armed with these experiences I asked around. These experiences are far more common then one would initially believe. That's because these individuals fear talking about their experiences because generally they are treated like they are crazy when they talk about them. This is something that's very wrong about our culture, when people's beliefs are criticized to the point where they don't even want to talk about them. I'm not accusing you of going that far but it gets very tiring having to constantly defend them.
Anyone who has a modicum of experience in the occult will tell you that our beliefs have a massive impact in how we experience the occult. Not having beliefs gives us a more pure experience. If one approaches the demonic expecting to see a hell spawn then that's what you generally will find. When I look at the world I see a thousand shades of grey. Nothing is so black and white anymore. And Crowley's quote I assume touches on this. His rituals and experiments may seem like one giant hoax to you but unless you actually successfully completed one of them then there's no way you can be 100% assured they are bs or not.
As per my online dictionary copy and paste the whole point of that was to show you that words have multiple meanings (especially this word). I highlighted the part that very much so goes against your limited definition of it.
Also in ancient Greek, "departed soul, spirit, ghost," and often represented symbolically as a butterfly or moth. The word had extensive sense development in Platonic philosophy and Jewish-influenced theological writing of St. Paul (compare spirit (n.)). Meaning "human soul" is from 1650s. In English, psychological sense "mind," is attested by 1910.Plato's tripartite theory of the soul also greatly expands on your limited definition. You know Plato was a well known ancient Greek philosopher right
. In fact some even call him the father of philosophy.
Energy manipulation of chi/ki/prana is step one and the least interesting part of it but I'm happy that you at least acknowledge it. But I didn't get into the occult to play around with energy in my body, I got into it to experience the "impossible". Whether your etymology definition of the word spiritualist holds true with many people on this forum doesn't take away from the validity of the definition. This isn't necessarily a forum where you will find many traditional spiritualists. That being said, a lot of people think spirituality is just one big giant group hug where you dance around and take a lot of drugs and sing kumbaya. Nothing could be further from the truth. A more modern definition of the word that you just might agree with, perhaps spirituality is just human's attempt to understand the intangible incommensurable parts of the human psyche science can't identify yet.
“I am that gadfly which God has attached to the state, and all day long …arousing and persuading and reproaching…You will not easily find another like me.”-- Socrates